Monday, December 3, 2012

December Guidecraft Educators Review/Giveaway: Desk to Easel Art Cart

Each month, the Guidecraft Educators will share our honest feelings
about a Guidecraft product(s) and how these products would fare in an
early childhood classroom. This month's selection comes from Guidecraft's Art Equipment line - Desk to Easel Art Cart.

I was very excited to see the Desk to Easel Art Cart when I arrived home from work in early November! My classroom art center needed some sprucing up and this seemed to do just the trick!

This versatile unit can be positioned as an upright, angled easel or a
folded-down, flat workspace. Features easy-to-clean laminate surfaces,
with a write-on/wipe-off surface and paper roll on one side and a
chalkboard on the opposite side. Plenty of storage space including four
fabric bins, paper cubbies, and a paint/glue bottle area allows young
artists to stay organized while working. Includes an 18" x 100' paper
roll, five paint cups, and side clips for displaying artwork. Adult
assembly required. Each fabric bin measures 9"W x 9"D x 5"H. Ages 3+.
22.5"W x 26"D x 42"H with easel fully assembled. 24" flat desk height.

While the assembled unit is very sturdy, I, personally, found the it very difficult and clumsy to put together. At times it required three sets of hands to maneuver the pieces into the correct position. I also found it necessary to "lock" the cart into the easel workspace, as I feared that the curious little fingers in my room would be too inquiring and get pinched. However, the lock can easily be undone and will make for a great crafting table for other projects at different points throughout the year (it will make for an awesome beading table)!

However, none of these factors has limited the children's interest in the art cart - it quickly became the favorite area in the room (despite the fact that we have had an easel/painting area ALL year long, I can count on one hand the number of children that showed an interest until last week)! We had to have a waiting list of children waiting to use the "new paint area" and could not help the children clear up their artwork fast enough for the next! No one has had much of an interest yet in the chalkboard side of the art cart, but I'm sure that time is coming - the children love their chalkboard table in the house area and it's only a matter of time until they really discover that there's now a second chalkboard for their use!

As you can see, we've moved added an extra set of portable tabletop easels to the table so that extra painters can be at work!

The storage bins on the bottom will come in handy for storing an assortment of paint-related supplies and materials that will help them be easily accessible to the children. Overall, I think the art cart is a great piece of equipment, once you get past the minor frustration of putting it together!

So... what do other 'Guidecraft Educators' have to say about the Desk to Easel Art Cart???

Guidecraft
is generously offering ONE lucky reader of the Guidecraft Educators a
chance to win one of these Desk to Easel Art Carts!!! To
enter, comment on this post, sharing one of your favorite paint-related projects to explore with preschool aged children!

You have until Wednesday, December 12 @ 11:59PM eastern time to enter.
Be sure to leave an email address so I can contact you if you are the
winner!Or... if you just can't wait to win one and NEED them now, they can be purchased online at:

If you're interested in finding out more information about any of the books reviewed or if you'd like to purchase the books, click the cover image for a link to Amazon.com. I am an Amazon Affiliate, so any purchases you make after clicking these images will result in my receiving a small percentage of the sale price!

257
comments:

One of my favorite paint projects to do with preschoolers is writing their name in white crayon and having them paint over it with watercolors. It's magic!!!! Always fun to watch their expressions when we do this :)

I love letting helping little ones paint their hands and make wreaths around Christmas. I haven't had a preschooler in the house in so long and now with a two year old, we need to start some fun projects with paint! My older girls loved painting rainbows and it makes me wonder what my youngest one will love to paint. sonyadmorris@gmail.com

One of my favorite Holiday Painting projects would be the hand-print Christmas tree. Paint one hand and print it to paper. Then the other over top of the first, but slightly higher. Go have a snack or make holiday cookies. When paint is dry come back and use finger prints for the lights and star.

My son (5) is deaf/autistic and has a lot of sensory issues. Thus, painting is not in his current gameplan. But, he loves to stand and watch his two sisters (8) paint, with a brush or using finger paint and stamps. So anything that gets his attention and keeps him entertained would be my favorite project. Right now, that's hand painted Christmas cards that he's been "helping" the girls with all week. :)

I did a project with my son where we taped the letters of his name on a piece of paper, then finger painted over it. When it dried we removed the masking tape and had a beautiful piece to hang on his door.

My daughter and my kids in my class love to paint with odd things. we have painted with bubble wrap, balls, their feet, newspaper, fruit and vegetables. I think my kids favorite so far this year has been the okra painting using dried okra.

cool giveaway- i am now following you- i have 2 year old twins and need learning information so i am excited....i like to take the kids in the backyard and put on old clothes and put watercolor on paper on an easle and then give them brushes and water cup and let them go at it= they are too young to do much else- its fun!

My son, who is 3, loves to paint. I usually give him finger paint, or some other type of washable paint, and some heavy paper and let him go to town. He loves to use his whole hands. He would love a table/easel like this.

One of my favorite painting projects is using items as masks. They children have a shape tape to the easel paper after they paint their paper, we peel off the mask to reveal a surprise.tiggerfan6@hotmail.com

I teach preschool and have children at home. One of my favorite activities is to do easel starters like two googly eyes on easel paper and see what the students create. Their imaginations run wild!Ajlim01@gmail.com

One of my favorite painting projects with my kiddos has been ice painting. I mixed water and washable paint in ice pop molds and froze them over night. The next day I gave the kids the paint ice pops and they went to town! It was neat to see the effects that were made on the paper when the ice melted together. The outcome of the paintings were really cool! amandanobbe@gmail.com

The easel is the most popular center in my classroom. I try to change out the colors and paint type each week. My favorite idea each month is i've asked the children to paint a specific thing. September I asked them to paint apples, October they painted pumpkins (this was my favorite month so far as each pumpkin was shaped differently just like real pumpkins.) November was a turkey and this month I plan to have them paint a xmas tree. My easel is a hand me down little tykes which only holds 3 cups of paint - I could really use an upgrade !! Thanks

our kids love to do puffy paint painting when you mix glue and food coloring and shaving cream usually i hide the drop of paints inside the blop of puffy paint so while the kids mix the paint they discover the color drup74@aol.com

A project I have loved doing at this time of year is to add peppermint flavoring to red paint. The children paint freely. Then, cut out a big candy cane shape when the paint has dried. These are colorful and the smell is lovely!Dianeteachgrd3@aol.com

This easel would be such an awesome addition to our family! It is much needed! A really fun and cool paint project I like to do this time of year is read books about Hanukkah and have my son make dreidel paintings by dipping the tips of different dreidels in different colors of paint (one at a time of course) and then spin his dreidel onto paper so he can see the different paint patterns he can make. I just put a large sheet of paper in a large baking pan/tupperware container and let him have at it! Faye E. Hunt chrisandfaye at gmail dot com

My favorite classroom activity with paint is 'free paint' where the little ones are allowed to just paint whatever....or anything that involves their little hands/feet...it brings many smiles and giggles

when it comes to easel paiting my favorite art activity derives from them. I enjoy watching them paint freely from their imagination and after they complete their masterpiece I ask them to tell me a story about it. I type the story up and hang it with the picture.

I love to have my PreSchool students paint with straws. We always practice blowing air out of our straws first, before we begin painting. (so we don't suck paint up the straw) It always fits well into our weather unit...we paint using "wind."

I have 3 that love art and are always doing something artsy. With my littlest, our favorite thing is to make potato stamps...using the ends of potatos, we etch a design with a knife (mom does this!), paint it and stamp. It works with zucchini as well. My oldest is experimenting with mixing colors, and my middle man loves to draw pictures then paint them like mosaics. We don't have an art area, so it would be great to feel organized and give them a place to work! aimee at mtwmex dot net

My favorite paint project is using tape to create the child's initial on paper and then letting them finger paint over it. After drying, I remove the tape and they have a beautiful, personalized piece of work.

My sons love to paint with rollers, leaves and stamps..anything they can get their hands on. They paint out in the sunshine or in front of our big window looking out at the rain. I live that even though they are boys, art is their most favorite thing to do, they will always choose it above any other toy or game. Sneedfamilyemail@gmail.com

My son loved fingerpainting on construction paper, and then using his paintings to create a garland for our christmas tree. Whenever he walks by the tree - he stops and admires his garlane and says "I did it!"

I would love to win this!!! My preschool class love to paint anything. I think my favorite is when we make something with their hand print.We just made moose for the letter M using their foot print for the face and then their hands made the moose's antlers. They turned out so cute!!

With four kiddos (5,3,2,10 months) and very little artistic ability myself, I can see great projects with the aid of this easle in our future. Right now our five year old loves making books and this easle would be perfect to help her with her illustrations!

My favorite activity its to draw with white crayon on blue paper a winter scene then we paint it lightly and then add a wonderful snowman made out of tissue paper over it. It ends up looking like a snowman in the middle of winter and the kids love it!dolphie@rcn.com

Being a nanny for over 15 years I've done lots of arts & crafts activities. Each family lending its own unique ideas to the activities I share with them. My favorites always include the hand and footprints.

My 19 month old granddaughter loves to paint her hand with a brush and make fingerprints and handprints all over the paper. So far, our little artist has explored paint, crayons, markers, and fingerpaint to her great delight!-Carol Roberts, ce.roberts@cox.net

My three year old loves to paint, exploring the different colours and using different utensils to paint (paintbrushes, sponges, pine cones, fingers, etc) and my one year old just loves the messy aspect of painting. My boys would love this. jessie_daniell@hotmail.com

I love to have preschoolers use different items to paint with not just a paint brush. Items we use are bows, yarn, straws, pinecones, artificial flowers etc. It is fun to see a child's creativity. For some it is easy and for others the unconventional is more difficult. It is fun to watch their process.

Paint is out on our easel daily but love it when they explore with different tools to make textures and mix colors. I also love to put a piece of paper in a box with a hole for their hand to fit through, add finger paint, then close the lid. They paint with their fingers without looking. They love the anticipation of seeing what they created by touch only.

I love making a hand painted flower or trees they make a wonderful Mothers or Fathers day gifts for parents or even grandparents.also you can never go wrong with molds of any kind hands,feet prints flower, Chirstmas orderments, Birthday orderments,love useing cookie cutters the plastic one :-)cjanie09@gmail.com

I show my students paint chip colors from the paint stores and we talk about the names the company gives the color. They then mix paint colors at the easel. We make our own paint samples and think of names to give to each color.hansfarm@gmail.com

After reading Karen Beaumont's "I Ain't Gonna Paint No More!", have your child or students paint a self portrait (the "clean" version of themselves). On day 2 put the self portrait in a box and have children splatter thinned down red, yellow and blue paints over the top of it (the "messy" version of themselves). They'll love it!!

My daughter just did a great project where she used spray bottles of watered down paint to create a colorful marbelized effect on the paper. This works great on a roll of paper towel-type paper because the colors blend together like beautiful watercolors. cteeobrien(at)cox(dot)net.

Painting with all different types of brushes, especially those things that are not normally used, like vacuum brushes, bottle brushes, pot scrubbers, basting mops, fly swatters, thread spools, stuffed animal toys, little matchbox cars. The ideas can be endless and each time they paint with something new they create something totally different. Change out the size and shape of the paper too. Thanks to Bev Bos for letting me see the possibilities around me for kids. CarolWatson1@suu.edu

I like to have the children paint with differnt items like toothbrush, feathers, toothpick, cotton balls with a clothpin, socks, q- tips. The children come up with all differnt idea to add to the paint bin.

I like to have my class "horse tail" paint. Take some lengths of yarn and tie a knot at one end. The child holds the knot, dips the "tail" in paint, and flicks it on the easel. I don't currently have an easel, so I would love to win one! jujuz20@yahoo.com

I need this easel! We have the current easel set up every day with paints and different tools, like sponges, feathers, etc. instead of using brushes all the time. One of our favorite activities is to partner paint. One child will start the painting, another adds to it. Creating collaborative art builds communication skills and is just plain fun! Only "problem" is who gets to take the art home. So we make lots of pictures.

I teach at a very small privately owned preschool. It is very hard for us to come by funds to update our center and we are in desperate need of new materials. This easel would be PERFECT for my classroom! It is so versatile, it would definitely be put to good use. My favorite paint related activity is providing the children with different materials to explore while painting and watching their creativity run :)

I loved making ice paint (tempura paint frozen in fun shapes) the kids can use the frozen paint shapes like sponge or they can just use them like frozen paint brushes and use their imaginations to paint whatever they like. It's a great art project that also allows for important sensory exploration as well. Would LOVE to win this easel art cart! Jenwhitaker00@gmail.com is my email... hope to get an early Christmas present late next week from you/Guidecraft. Thanks for the opportunity!

Thanks, Teach Preschool, for sharing! I love this easel! I learned about Guidecraft when we were shopping for a kid's stool for the kitchen. I was impressed. This should be great! My kids love to mix the primary colors and see what happens. Ktlasers at gmail dot com

My class would go crazy for this!My favorite painting experience for my 3's is to let them paint on an easel with anything BUT a paintbrush...bubble wrap, sea sponges, those foam glass cleaner sponges on a stick....even legos! After all....I want to have fun too, and watching them try any of the above is really rewarding...

I love this style of easel - it's so versatile! It would be a fabulous addition to the classroom. I love doing all kinds of painting project, especially using various additions for changing the textures of paint (adding salt, coffee grounds, sand, glitter, corn syrup, etc) and putting out different types of "paint brushes" (cotton balls, q-tips, feathers, pine needles, cut veggies & fruits, string or yarn, sponges, pot scrubbers, you name it!)

This is such a fabulous easel with a lot of storage space. The children in my family home daycare love to paint rainbows. Since we don't have an easel and a lot of storage space, we could put this to use right away. They would be intrigued to be able to "stand up" and paint from a different angle since they usually paint at a table. Thank you for offering this beautiful easel as a giveaway.

Great giveaway! Everything can be conveniently stored on the bottom. My son loves to paint with different objects we find in the house (bubbles, cotton balls, q-tips, potato smasher...). He's my little explorer! Salazje@hotmail.com

One of my favorite art projects to do with preschool children is "Under the table" painting. The children enjoy lying on their backs to paint. Children who normally will not be involved in painting activities will do this one. They love it!!

My preschoolers loved painting real pumpkins this fall. They also enjoyed shaking a box with marbles that were covered in paint and watching the designs. We put paper in the bottom of the box so they can take their creations home with them. Right now we don't have a paint easel in our preschool room but would sure love one.

Hi, this is a beautiful giveaway. My son is beginning to paint. Finger paint, sponge paint. This Desk to Easel Art Carts will be so much appreciated as he will grow and he will be expressing much more trough paint. bianca . bodoki at gmail . com Thanks.

The children love painting their hands and arm and trsnsfering that onto a piece of paper and making a tree to represent what season we are in. They can use their fingerprints for the leaves. This art center would be a big plus in my classroom.

Fingerpainting is the most entertaining paint activity for my two year old group! We don't have an easel at my newly opened home daycare but it would b super cool! In my cousins class the use the easel for a shaving cream activity n she loves it!! Contact email address: lindseyaliggera@yahoo.com

This easel would be great in preschool not only as an art center, but for Circle Time as well. The white board side could be used for magnetic letters, and story props. It would also be great to use as a Big Book holder during story time or to hold a flannel board as well. Circle Time supplies could be stored in the bins below. Looks like a great product. I'd love to have it in my class.

The easel would be great not only as an art center, but for Circle Time as well. The white board would be great with magnetic letters, story props, and games. It would also be great when using Big Books or flannel boards. Also supplies would be handy in the storage bins below. Looks like a great product. I'd love to have something like it in my class.

Thank you for being so generous, and sharing this giveaway. What a smile you are going to put on a Child's Face, if she, or he is the Winner.

Im entering more so for my granddaughter, due to her writing interest at an early age. She recently turned Two, and enjoys writing. It doesn't matter, whether she uses a pencil, pen, crayon, marker, color pencil, etc. The forming of circles, drawing lines up, or down, and doing her very best to write letters ate her favorite thing to do.

I teach preschool and recently had my students recreate the Aurora Borealis for our Alaska unit. We did a salt painting. First you start out with sheets of card stock. Each child uses a glue bottle to create lines and patterns in glue. Then the child shakes salt onto the glue. I knock off the excess salt. On the art table we set out 4 different colors of water paint. Then the children paint on top of the salt. When it dries it has a cool effect. The colors are rich and look great in the window.Maggi BaileyBriarMaggi@gmail.com

The children in my class love painting with different tools. We love cotton balls, brushes, droppers, and, most recently, bath poufs from the dollar store. They also love shaving cream with food color as a medium!!

I like the thoroughness of the review of the easel. It seems like it would be a great addition to my kindergarten classroom. During the holidays I enjoy having my students make handprint calendars for presents.

I have my students draw a winter scene on dark construction paper. Then, I mix Kosher salt with water. The kids paint their paper with the mixture. The result is a crystallized snow scene. The kids love it!!

Most of the children in my class do LOVE to paint. Painting on or with different materials provides a new experience. I put out sheets of foil and various colors of tempera paints for the children. They thought painting on foil was so "fun"! I noticed they were using four of their senses during this activity except of course for taste! I brought this to their attention, "I see that you are using four of your senses while you are painting. Can you tell me which ones?" They gave me all the right answers, even adding "if we tasted it, we would use all our senses". Everyday they give me they gift of laughter!

I love for the children to do "team" painting....where two or more children work on one piece. It encourages planning, collaboration, language, negotiation and it's really fun to paint with your friends!

I like to keep the children's painting open ended. They love to finger paint and mix the colours. This easel would be a great addition to the preschool I hope to open up in the next couple of years! trishbro79@gmail.com

A simple paint project we like to do is just use two colors at a time, one always being white. Like black and white or red and white or green and white. Simple, but my boys always just enjoy the painting aspect and the mixing of the colors to see the light and dark contrast.

What a great Christmas gift for my classroom!! Working with Head Start four year old children our budget is next to nothing. My little friends LOVE to express their artistic talents daily. We use our tables or have clothes pins glued to the wall for our easel.

This looks like the answer to a neater classroom. Two messy activities in one area, room to keep all supplies, and even space to display art work. It would be a great place for the students to experiment with glitter paint and express their holiday feelings. Glitter paint can be bought, but it can also be made by adding a paint additive (Make it Glitter) or salt. If you use salt, be sure to stir until the salt is mixed into the paint.ckaycox@comcast.net

I like to introduce my preschoolers to different artists - showing pictures of different stlyes of painting - and then I set out a flower in a vase, or piece of fruit on a tray, etc. near the paint easel and let them create their own still life painting. cindym119@gmail.com

Not sure if my first comment went through, I didn't see it in the comments section. We would love to have an "art place" in our small home! We love to paint mixing colors, or doing mosaics, or even potato stampers (I etch a design in the end of a potato that I have cut off, then let my 2 year old stamp away!

One of my favorite painting projects for my students is to give them a blank sheet of paper with two googley eyes already glued to the paper. It is so fun to see what creations they come up with, they love the googley eyes and it gives them some form of a start point which helps. I don't tell or dictate what to paint, I just hand them the papers and let their creative juices flow! -jennabrott@yahoo.com

One of my favorite painting projects I have done with my preschoolers is to give them a paper with their name written in dots, they then use paint to trace over the letters of their name. This provides and fun way to practice letter formation and spelling their names!

My granddaughter loves to paint with anything, on anything. She loves the feel of the paint. She likes to dip her dinosaur feet(or her feet or hands) into paint and walk on the paper for dinosaur tracks. She loves to draw with chalk and crayons (she only makes circles right now. . . she's 2 1/2). I take care of her every day while her mama works and we love to do all kinds of arts and crafts together. fcfeather@gmail.com

The easel would be a great addition to my classroom at NCredible Kid's Day Out. I love to paint. I work with 18 mos. - 24 mos. old. They love to paint with brushes, their fingers, feathers, marbles, sponges, cotton, leaves, cars, papertowel rolls, toilet paper rolls, etc.

The children in my class and I love to paint blindfolded, cause you don't know what your painting until it's all done. It also gives them an opportunity to explore painting along with gaining an understanding of sight and senses.

Painting blind folded is fun in my preschool classroom,the children get really excited to see their painting that was made without their eyes. It gives them the opportunity to explore their senses and gain a better understanding about seeing.cheneyabcpreschool@gmail.com

A paint project that you could do with preschool aged children is cutting pieces of fruits or vegetables in half and dabbing them with paint and then stamping them on paper. It's a fun and cool project for them to do. And very colorful too. If I won this cool desk/easel cart, I would give it to a friend of mine who just opened up her own daycare. It would be very cool for her to have and the children would love it. very much! My e-mail address is jkoskamp9@gmail.com.

I didn't know that something this awesome existed! This would solve all of our arts and crafts supplies storage issues and contain it so that she's at a "station". We're still at the finger-painting stage but she's still my little Picasso :) Therefore, my favourite painting project is when she discovers the blending of colors to discover new colors in a "hands-on" kind of way!

I am a new preschool teacher. So far we have only been able to explore tempura paints. Mostly we use construction paper or printer paper. But, this week we tried using watered down paint on coffee filters (that we had cut into snow flakes) and they had a blast. We are going to use some bucher paper and try the easel starter (with the bow.)I It would be nice if we had an easel to do it on. We will turn a table sideways instead. Thanks, Karen jaxique at gmail dot com

My oldest is now 2.5 and she will be getting some paints for Xmas. We haven't done paint-related crafts yet, but I'm looking forward to showing her the stuff that I liked to do way back like fingerpainting.

leaf painting is a great way to bring nature into the mix. They can paint the leaves and use them like a stamp - or they can lay the leaf on the paper and 'flick' the paint over it to create a leafy outline. a little walk outdoors turns into a great creative opportunity & you can talk about the different leaves as well as combine the shapes to make scenes. rjdoghouse (at) yahoo dot com

We did the hands in the plaster kit and we still do painting with them on a regular basis. We buy old wooden items, ornaments etc at yard sales and then the kids repaint/paint them at home with the collection of paint they have accummulated over the past couple years.coreybrennan26@hotmail.com

I have a licensed home day care a nd my kids loved the pretend stain glass we did. You need wax paper, rollers and paint. Put one sheet of Wax paper down for each child and child picks their colors to drip on the wax paper then cover with another piece and use the rollers to roll and mix the colors. When dry hang in the windows. shellie.cormier@nl.rogers.com

my daughter LOVES painting. Recently i started making her paint for the tub by mixing food color with shaving cream, i give her a brush and there she goes all over the shower tiles! easy to clean and she has SO MUCH fun!

Our favorite easel project is tempera or watercolors with open ended materials such as foam stickers and painter's tape. The kids like stickers so much they want to use the whole sheet we leave out, so everyone spends a good amount of time at the easel and then has a completely original finished product. When they paint and peel the stickers off (peeling stickers sneaks in some fine motor) they think its like magic and discover a whole new form of art they created!

My favorite paint job are using paints that have different smells and different textures in them. I love to hear the children talk about what they smell like or how they are different in the ways that they are textured. Another project that I love doing with the children is making my own paint for them to use. They love making the different ingredients and colors.

My favorite painting activities are always ones that use something other than paintbrushes. This holiday season my preschoolers loved painting with pine tree branches. It made a cool texture on the paper and each child had of different way of using the branches- some smoothed the paint and some flicked it.

My favorite painting activities are always ones that use something other than paintbrushes. This holiday season my preschoolers loved painting with pine tree branches. It made a cool texture on the paper and each child had of different way of using the branches- some smoothed the paint and some flicked it. jeanzy312 at gmail dot com

One of my favorite paint activities is to paint with different items. We have painted with feathers and pumpkins(kinda like the apple print activity) and then we have painted with pine branches, and you name it we have tried it. And this year we can't keep paint at the easel fast enough. I have kids there all the time. So a new easel like this would be a wonderful addition to my Head Start classroom.jenjen01_99@yahoo.com

I have to say that one of my favorite painting activities to do with the children in my classroom is cork painting. The children love using non conventional items for painting. The corks provide the added protection from mess for my sensory sensitive learners while engaging my more exploratory learners with a chance to roll, dot, and smear paint in new gross and fine motor actions. This easel would be a blessing to my classroom as we have a very old, hand-me-down, on it's last legs, double sided easel that needs replacing! nikipurcell@sbcglobal.net

I would LOVE this for my pre-k class as we were created from nothing and I have no budget so to speak! I have been using a re-purposed white board and hot glued clips for an easel that really works okay. The kids love paint with toothbrushes, q-tips, and anything else that shows different textures in their art.

My children (6 and 3.5) would absolutely love this! They love painting all. of. the. time! their favorite painting project right now is making pictures of our museum (they hang their pictures up on our walls and my daughter writes a caption underneath each one because "that's what real artists do"). she wants to be an art teacher when she grows up :-)

About Me

About the Blog

I am a Head Start teacher by day and a reader during any/all free time. Being a teacher I am always looking for children's books and products to use in the classroom.

This blog is going to provide parents and educators with books, products and a variety of educational activities to share with preschool and early elementary aged children (ages 3-7). Feel free to steal the ideas for your own classroom/homeschool, reading group, library or children!

Reviews

I am very interested in receiving copies of children's books and educational products for review. If you have a book or product that you are willing to send for review, please email me for contact information at kateh12783@hotmail.com.